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Monday, October 13, 2014

Neo Inker Barbara Kaalberg: Keeping Us In The Black

By Dan Johnson

When
the word went out that Charlton Neo was putting together a creative team for a
new line of comic books, one of the first people that Excutive Editor Paul Kupperberg
reached out to was inker Barbara Kaalberg. Kaalberg, a twenty-plus years vet in
the industry, has been instrumental in making some of the Charlton Neo artwork
the slickest and best it can be. She’s one busy lady, but thankfully I was able
to catch up with her for a short interview.

Dan Johnson: How did you come to work in comics and
how did you get into inking?

Barbara Kaalberg: I was a stay at home Mom in the 80’s with a
half-finished art degree and my youngest getting ready to go off to school. While
browsing in Walden’s Bookstore one day I ran across the Elfquest graphic novels. I was blown away by Wendy Pini’s art. I’d
read superhero comics while growing up, but Wendy’s art just spoke to me. I’d
been painting for years, but suddenly I’m looking at these luscious inks and I
said to myself “I could take my brushes and do this!” I literally just packed
up all the art I had in a portfolio large enough to haul a body in and set off
for San Diego Comic Con in 1988. Talk about a lamb among the wolves! I did all
the wrong things and had not a single clue what I was doing, but I attended
how-to seminars...Dick Giordano’s inking seminar was amazing! I still remember
it vividly over a quarter century later. I talked to people and asked
questions. I watched everything and hung out in artists alley. I took a
completely useless portfolio, but I came home with ideas and a goal. I did
nothing but practice inking for a solid year, went back to SDCC the following
year, and came home with a job offer.

Johnson: What are some of the projects
you worked on before coming to Charlton Neo?

Kaalberg: I’ve had a pretty prolific career so that’s a loaded
question.I’ve done well over 3,000
pages of inked material, even though I took a decade off. I spent all of the 90’s
putting two books, plus covers and cards, out per month. Several books in the
Ultraverse line for Malibu Comics (Solitaire
was my fave there), books for Innovation, Now Comics, Acclaim Comics, Dark
Horse, Image (another favorite; Mike Baron’s The Badger), Marvel and even WaRP Graphics’ Elfquest offshoot books, so I came back to my original muse that
way. DC Comics, however, was my major mainstay. I worked the entire Primal Force series from conception to
end and did Impulse for 2 1/2 years
as well as many other one-shots and shorts for Superman, Wonder Woman, Green Lantern, Hawkman and more. You can find a fairly comprehensive list at the
Comic Book Database.

Johnson: Who have been some of your
favorite pencillers to work with and why?

Kaalberg: I have had so many awesome pencillers! Craig Rousseau,
Rags Morales, Dean Zachary, Rick Hoberg, Ken Hooper, Mel Rubi, Joyce Chin, and
Ed Benes to name just a few and I've loved them all. I have a very adaptable,
versatile style and every penciller brings their own personality to the pages
and that makes it fun. My goal is to enhance but never bury or overpower the
pencils. I like to keep my pencillers happy. I think the Solitaire series over Jeff Johnson (and my all time favorite cover
for Solitaire #1) and Impulse over Ethan Van Sciver may edge
out the others by the tiniest margin, however.

Johnson:You have been
with Charlton Neo since the beginning. I mean you inked the very first story
that appeared in Charlton Arrow #1.
How did you come to be a part of the company?

Kaalberg: Oh, that’s easy! Paul Kupperberg. Paul was one of
two editors at DC willing to put their faith in a woman inker. It was a very
tough gig back then to get in with the “Big Two” as a woman creator (not it’s that
much better now, actually). The smaller publishers were very open minded and
gave me anything and everything to ink, but mainstream superheroes seemed to be
a men only club.Marvel had a
tendency to want to stick me only on Barbie
and Disney books, but would throw me a small superhero bone occasionally. Paul
and Kevin Dooley at DC put me on superheroes right away. You know how rare that
was back then? Paul and I have said for years that we would love to work
together again, so when Charlton Arrow
#1 came into being, he contacted me and the rest is history!

Johnson:Did you ever
have any idea that The Charlton Arrow,
as a fanzine, would spawn a brand-new comic book company?

Kaalberg: Hey, Teenage
Mutant Ninja Turtles started out as a little, B&W book financed by a
tax return so this wasn’t out of the realm of possibilities. When I saw the
line up of creators that wanted to contribute, I knew we were on to something.

Johnson: What are some of the projects
you are working on for the company at this time?

Kaalberg: I just finished “My Heart Took Wings” for Paul Kupperberg’s Secret Romances #1. Pat
and Tim Kennedy’s pencils were so crisp and clean. I hope to be able to work
with them again. I’ll be starting a Western called Tokada soon with you and
Kevin Halter. I love Kevin’s organic pencils and I love Westerns so it’s a
win/win for me.

Johnson: Besides doing some amazing
inks, you’ve also been instrumental in bringing some other female creators to
Charlton Neo’s attention. Who are some of the women you would like to see
eventually working for the company?

Johnson: Speaking just to the women out there who
might be reading this, what advice would you give them in regards to breaking
into the comics business?

Kaalberg: The
first thing you have to remember is that this is your business. Your career. Be
professional, be confident, be persistant. Grow a tough skin. Don’t let
yourself be a doormat, but don’t be a whiner, either. Find other women creators
and network. Know your skills and market them. Again, I can’t stress this
enough; be a professional. Art is a passion, but you can’t eat or pay your
mortgage with passion alone. Comics is a part of the entertainment industry,
with all the foibles and quirks that come with. It’s crazy and fun and scary
and hard. It’s challenging and frustrating and fleeting and enduring and
quixotic. But mostly it’s addictive. Once you’re in, it’s in your blood and,
even if you leave it as I did for awhile, you can never shake it. It calls to
you.

Johnson: And speaking to both any potential male and
female inkers, what is the best advice you can give them about pursing inking
as a career?

Kaalberg: Practice.
A lot. Seriously, after I decided on my course, inking, I spent a couple of
months just filling blank pages with lines. Straight lines, curved lines,
diagonal, horizontal, crosshatched, circles, thick, thin, thick to thin, thin
to thick. Page after page after page. Just lines, side by side. But I learned
control. I had total mastery over my instruments. Only then did I acquire pencil
samples to practice on. Study the
effects, line weights and texturing of some of the greats like Joe Sinnott, Bob
McLeod, Wendy Pini, and especially Wally Wood, amongst many others (a Facebook
question on the best inkers will give lots of input to choose from). Put
together a portfolio. Choose just 6 to 8 examples of 11’ x 17” photocopies,
both before and after pages. Select a good sampling of your best work that
includes both pin-ups and sequential art. Editors will not comb through a lot
of stuff and they quickly get an idea of what you are capable of. Be prepared
to take harsh critiques. They are not personal attacks. Those editors are telling
you what they are looking for in an inker. Listen, learn, thank them for their
time, then try again, if necessary. And again. And again. Persistence pays off.